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Social work students with personal experience of sexual abuse: Implications for diploma in social work programme providers
14
Citations
7
References
1997
Year
EducationSocial Work PolicySocial Work PracticeMental HealthSocial WorkSocial SciencesTeacher EducationSocial Work StudentsGender StudiesSocial Work TrainingSexual And Reproductive HealthHealth SciencesPersonal ExperienceSexual AssaultSexual HealthSexual AbuseSchool Social WorkSociologySocial Work Research
Social work training attracts a significant proportion of students with personal experience of psychosocial trauma and oppression, including various forms of abuse. This article considers some of the implications for social work educators. Sexual abuse is the oppression selected to illustrate this discussion because it is central to contemporary social work training and practice and it is the author's experience that student disclosures of sexual abuse are common. Emotive but unavoidable for both students and educators, sexual abuse issues demonstrate the need for programme providers to address their responsibilities to applicants, students, partner agencies and service users. Continued failure to do so ignores the risks of legal liability and raises questions of whether their practices are consistent with the DipSW's value base. DipSW programme providers are advised to take practical steps both to protect themselves and to provide appropriate support for students. They are asked to review application and selection procedures and urged to define the roles and expectations of course tutors and practice teachers.
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